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6 HASTINGS MAIL, JULY 20, 2011
NEWS
No stranger to the educational
market, Blackboard Jungle
has been sourcing fabulous
educational products from
around the world for 10 years
now and opened their exciting
new store due to customers'
requests for convenient one-
stop shopping. Whether
you have pre-schoolers or
teenagers, there are games,
science kits, puzzles and toys
to keep everyone busy and
happy. Parents love the value
for money, grandparents are
impressed with the quality
and children delight in the
wide range; there's something
for everyone! Teachers and
educators will enjoy the
convenience of having one
of New Zealand's largest
educational ranges right on
their doorstep.
For interesting products,
great service and the
chance to find a toy
visit us at 7 Donnelly St,
Havelock North
NEW TO THE VILLAGE
Shopping for
educational toys,
games and materials
has just got a whole lot
easier with the opening
of Blackboard Jungle
at 7 Donnelly Street in
Havelock North.
SYLVAN ROAD
909 HERETAUNGA ST EAST
HASTINGS
NURSERY
RETAIL
K.O. HARRISON
QUALITY PERENNIAL
PLANTS
PH 876 8022
H
U
G
E
S
E
L
E
C
TI
O
N
OPEN
WED,
THUR, FRI
10AM--
4:30PM
SAT, SUN
1PM-4PM
CLOSED
MON.TUES
Taylors
Dry
Cleaner
Town Lodge
3542950AA
STANDOUT SELECTION • SUPERIOR SERVICE
Stortford Lodge Hastings / Pandora Road Napier
06 873 0003
06 835 4440
* We are selectively buying vehicles right now under 10 years old
and travelled less than 100,000km
2156658
We'll buy your vehicle
Even if you don't buy one of ours
World-first: Corrections chief executive Ray
Smith, left, and Dr Pita Sharples at the
opening of Hawke's Bay prison's new Whare
Oranga Ake re-integration unit.
Life outside the wire
CONTINUED Page 7
Help: Hawke's Bay prison's new Whare Oranga Ake
re-integration unit for Maori prisoners.
Pre-release prisoners have spent their
first week at Hawke s Bay Regional
Prison s world-first Whare Oranga Ake
Maori prisoner re-integration unit.
The first group of inmates, including
one who has spent the past 17 years in
prison, stayed their first night at the
$3.9m outside the wire re-integration
unit last Wednesday, the day before it
was officially opened by Associate Min-
ister of Corrections Dr Pita Sharples,
in a ceremony attended by Corrections
chief executive Ray Smith.
Corrections says the Hawke s Bay
unit, and another which opened at
Waikato s Spring Hill Corrections
Facility last Friday, will help reduce
high recidivism rates among Maori
prisoners.
Maori incarceration rates are five
times higher than non-Maori, and
more than half of Maori prisoners
reoffend within four years of being
released.
The unit will house an initial group
of 16 low-risk inmates with three to six
months left on their sentences. The
number of inmates could increase to 32
after the success of the unit is
reviewed in a year s time.
The inmates will live in groups of
four, in four separate accommodation
blocks at the unit, which also features
a main communal building to be used
for visits by family members.
Inmates will have separate
bedrooms in each accommodation
block and share a kitchen, living area
and bathroom. They will cook, clean
and do laundry for themselves.
Before being accepted into the units,
inmates must pledge to remain drug
and alcohol-free, and not to become
physically violent.